Heroin Addicts with a History of Glue Sniffing: A Deviant Group within a Deviant Group

Abstract
Sociodemographic, drug-taking history and psychological test data were collected from 133 human male heroin addicts in treatment programs. Those addicts who had ever sniffed glue (26.4%) were characterized by a unique orientation toward death. Not only were they significantly more likely to have attempted suicide, but also they more often fantasized about death both while on heroin and when clean, and they acknowledged less fear of the pain/deterioration involved in dying as measured by the Collett-Lester Scales. They had on the average abused more than twice as many different substances as addicts without a glue use history.

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